One Rock Three Religions (2015) official film poster, documentary produced by Massimiliano 'Max' Musina, directed by Isaac Hertz, featuring Pope Francis and the Dalai Lama

Feature Documentary · 2015 · Produced by Massimiliano Musina

One Rock Three Religions

Documentary · 2015

One site sacred to three faiths. A documentary about whether the place that divides them could also unite them.

  • Director Isaac Hertz
  • Writer/Editor Alain Jakubowicz
  • Producer Massimiliano "Max" Musina
  • Featuring Pope Francis, The Dalai Lama, Shimon Peres, Marianne Williamson
  • Awards Jury Prize, Global Nonviolent Film Festival

Where to watch

Official Trailer

Synopsis

The most contested thirty-five acres on earth, and the question of whether peace is possible.

The Temple Mount in Jerusalem, known as Haram al-Sharif in Arabic, occupies a physical space smaller than most city parks. It is also the most politically sensitive piece of real estate on the planet. Sacred to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam alike, it has been the epicenter of wars, uprisings, diplomatic crises, and theological disputes for thousands of years. The question the film asks is not whether this history can be erased, but whether it can be understood clearly enough to permit a different future.

Director Isaac Hertz takes the documentary from the stones of the Temple Mount outward into the world, tracing the influence that this single location exerts on global politics, interfaith dialogue, and the daily lives of ordinary people living in its proximity. The film features conversations with Pope Francis, the Dalai Lama, and the late Shimon Peres, three figures whose moral authority crosses national and religious boundaries. Marianne Williamson contributes a perspective rooted in the American spiritual tradition. Writer and editor Alain Jakubowicz shapes these voices into a coherent narrative that moves between the historical and the personal.

The documentary does not pretend that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has a simple resolution. What it does is create a space where religious leaders, scholars, and citizens speak with candor about what the Temple Mount means to them and what they believe it could mean if the conversation were conducted differently. The film won the Jury Prize at the Global Nonviolent Film Festival and was screened at the United States Congress in recognition of its contribution to peace and interfaith dialogue.

Massimiliano "Max" Musina produced the film alongside Isaac Hertz and Alain Jakubowicz. It is available to stream on Amazon Prime and free on Tubi.

Cast & Crew

The team behind the film.

Direction & Writing

  • Isaac Hertz Director
  • Alain Jakubowicz Writer, Editor

Production

  • Massimiliano "Max" Musina Producer
  • Valentina Castellani Producer
  • Isaac Hertz Producer
  • Alain Jakubowicz Producer
  • Judah Hertz Executive Producer
  • Ron Samuels Executive Producer

Featuring

  • Pope Francis
  • The Dalai Lama
  • Shimon Peres
  • Marianne Williamson

Cinematography

  • Artem Zuev Cinematographer

Recognition

Recognition and availability.

Global Nonviolent Film Festival

Won, Jury Prize (Feature Documentary), partnered with IMDb

United States Congress

Screened and recognized for its contribution to peace and interfaith dialogue in the Middle East

Global Nonviolent Film Festival

Official Selection, Feature Documentary, 2017